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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: “His Silicon Soul” & “Fire from Olympus”

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His Silicon Soul”
Written by Marty Isenberg, Robert N. Skir
Directed by Boyd Kirkland
Episode #060
Music Composed by Carl Johnson, Harvey R. Cohen
Animation by Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD.
Original Airdate—November 20th, 1992

Plot:“Batman” wakes up in a crate, and quickly discovers he’s actually a robot duplicate, created by the supercomputer HARDAC as a back up plan to take over the world

“His Silicon Soul,” one of my favorite episodes, confronts an existential question at the heart of the series. If someone acts like Batman, can they in fact be Batman?

“His Silicon Soul” is a direct sequel to  “Heart of Steel,” though if you haven’t seen it, an expository thief helpfully explains a supercomputer once tried to take over Gotham by making robot duplicates of important people. And as much as that two-parter relied on Blade Runner for inspiration, “His Silicon Soul,” is even more Philip K. Dick-ish by adding in the existential concerns of We Can Remember it For You Wholesale and A Scanner Darkly. The unnamed Batman Android (herewith known as Batmandroid) has memories of being Bruce Wayne and Batman, and therefore believes itself to be Batman. When it becomes undeniable that he has a mechanized body, Batmandroid rationalizes that he’s still Bruce Wayne, just stuck in a robot.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus

Marty Isenberg and Robert Skir, from the title on down, always treat Batmandroid as a person, not a thing, one that has hopes and fears and needs, one that lives and dies. That Batmandroid is wearing down, that in some ways he’s more mortal than Batman, is a plot point. Batmandroid’s humanity serves as the every-five-episode reminder that Kevin Conroy is really really good you guys. Batmandroid’s desperate pleas for help to Alfred are devastating. From Batmandroid’s point of view, he’s trapped in a horrible nightmare, and his closest family member is running away in fear. It’s goddamn heartbreaking.

While the writers treat Batmandroid as human, that respect is not shared by the human characters. Batman, Alfred, and robot maker Karl Rossum (William Sanderson reprises his role) are careful to only refer to Batmandroid as “it” and “just a robot. Period.” Karl, who once thought he could replace humanity with robots, has completely rejected that ideology to go live on a farm (though he’s still using giant robots to help him). It’s Karl that makes a strong distinction between what Batmandroid has, “data,” “cold, hard facts,” and memories: “Your first kiss? Your favorite song? The last time you tasted a really good steak?” Memories are facts with strong emotional components. On a metatextual level, Rossum’s examples show the difference between what a writer knows about their characters versus what a person knows about themselves. Does anyone know what Bruce Wayne’s favorite song is? Is that what makes him a person, and not just an idea?

Batmandroid’s existential crisis recalls “Perchance to Dream,” where Bruce Wayne wakes up with memories of being Batman despite everyone telling him he’s not. But Batman, and thus Batmandroid, is too much the detective to just believe what people tell him, and must discover the truth for himself. Batmandroid’s greatest need is answers.

I described “Perchance to Dream” as “For the Man Who Has Everything” but with Batman, and by the same token “His Silicon Soul” feels like a Bizarro story, but with Batman. Batmandroid is another misfit of science, the monster who has every reason to believe he is the hero of the story, and who tries to do everything right but is still a threat to the world. Batmandroid fights crime, solves mysteries, risks his own life to save Rossum. But as long as he’s in denial about who he really is, he can be manipulated by HARDAC into using “the information network this computer is linked with” (aka “the internet”) to destroy the world. Batmandroid is the most literal dark reflection of Batman the series has provided so far.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus

“His Silicon Soul” follows up on a lot of themes from the series, especially those found in the last few episodes. Here’s another villain who wants to save the world by destroying humanity. There’s even another Freudian swordfight between generations of Batmen for control of the planet, only this time Batman is the older generation, and Batmandroid the inevitable replacement. Here’s another red-eyed, cybernetically enhanced Batman who is temporarily freed from human frailty only to have technology fail and be faced with his own mortality. And, of course, here’s another hero inspired by Batman and an apparent do-gooder who hides a monster underneath, a monster revealed when the left half of his face is destroyed.

While not as outright frightening as “Heart of Steel,” “His Silicon Soul” still has moments of terror, especially the fight in the Batcave. This is the third time Batman’s secret lair, his sanctum sanctorum, has been invaded, and this time it leads to a brutal fight. If the worst of villains can get into the Batcave, then Batman truly isn’t ever safe. Even more horrifying moment, by far, is when the Batmandroid takes off his mask. At first, it looks like he’s taking off the Batman mask, but he actually takes off both the Batman and Bruce Wayne mask, revealing his steel skull. The squicking sound effect that accompanies that reveal makes the whole thing one hundred times worse.

But it sets up the finale perfectly. Like Ra’s al Ghul, Batman cannot defeat his replacement in a fight, so instead he teaches the future generation to be better. He impresses on Batmandroid the importance of human life, how Batmandroid is too much like Batman to kill and thus cannot aid HARDAC in his plan. In a fit of rebellion, Batmandroid saves the world by punching out the Batcomputer, sacrificing his own life. In a sign of respect, Batman removes just the Batman mask from the Batmandroid’s head. To Bruce, Batmandorid was neither the superhuman Batman or the inhuman metal skeleton, but the very human layer in between.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus

Fire from Olympus”
Written by Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens
Directed by Dan Riba
Episode #062
Music Composed by Shirley Walker
Animation by Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD.
Original Airdate—May 24th, 1993

Plot: A whistleblower is struck by lightening on a clear day, and all evidence points to Maxie Zeus, a shipping magnate that believes he is actually the king of the gods.

Maxie Zeus was created in 1979 by Denny O’Neil, which just goes to show they can’t all be Ra’s al Ghul. I have never been able to take Maxie Zeus seriously as a villain, and this episode shows exactly why.

“Too crazy” is a weird complaint about a Batman villain, but for most of Batman’s rogues, their obsessions, manias, and phobias are what make them dangerous. For Maxie, his delusion that he is the god Zeus is a weakness that causes him to make mistake after mistake. Throughout the episode, his gang, Clio, Alex, and Unnamed, constantly tell Maxie to stop—Don’t antagonize Batman. Don’t attack the police. Don’t tie Clio to the lightning gun—and he never listens to them, to everyone’s detriment. The good years with this guy must have been really, really good because it’s hard to see why they still follow him when he’s this far gone.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus

This idiot is never a threat to Batman. For all that he has gargoyle gun turrets, lightning cannons, and a floor full of deadly animals, Batman can just pull a grenade out of his ass (almost literally) to get around it all. Maxie is mostly a threat to himself, leaping off a roof to grab his magic wand. Standards and Practices is the only reason Maxie’s self-inflicted head-first fall onto marble didn’t end with brain splatter. And the episode only lasts past the first commercial break because Batman, investigating a mysterious lightning strike, doesn’t immediately punch out the man holding the lightning gun and calling himself Zeus.

The episode takes stabs at making the character work, but each attempt comes up short. Clio suggests Maxie lost in his own dream world is another dark reflection of Batman, but Batman doesn’t think he’s actually a bat. Clio’s affection for Maxie allows the possibility that Maxie is a tragic villain, like Two-Face, one who might be saved. But, except for a single line, Maxie runs far far away from redemption so he can go blow up a blimp. The first scene suggests that maybe, maybe Maxie really is a god. In the comics, where Wonder Woman is a going concern, that’s a possibility, but Batman: the Animated Series has gone to lengths to show that magic does not exist, so Maxie is definitely just an idiot in a toga.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus

Which is a shame because so much of the rest of the episode is so good. From the opening shot of a lit match, “Fire from Olympus” is gorgeously animated, Dong Yang’s best work since “Almost Got ‘Im.” The blimp crash alone, a fiery hellscape in the streets of Gotham, shows how scary a villain Maxie could be, were he not a moron. Batman’s infiltration of Maximilian Shipping, and his fights against a python and a boar, are awfully dramatic, though pointless when you remember he should have taken out Zeus in the first act, not the third.

Similarly, the voice acting is great as well. Bess Armstrong is effective as Maxie’s long suffering assistant Clio, and even Steve Susskind plays Maxie’s pomposity well. In the very first scene, when the silhouetted Maxie gets out the car to deliver divine justice, the voice is appropriately ominous. But as the episode goes on, and Maxie is obviously delusional, the disconnect becomes grating without ever getting to humorous or campy. His lines are just tiresome, especially when he quotes “Ozymandias.” (Really, Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens? A Watchmen reference?)

In the end, Zeus is wheeled into Arkham, going down the same gallery as Batman did in “Fear of Victory,” and even sees the same three villains, Poison Ivy, Two-Face, and the Joker. This is supposed to work on two levels: one, that Maxie is still delusional and sees the other villains as Greek gods; and two, that he’s now one of them, a member of the inner rogues. But this fails on both levels. For one, he gets the gods wrong. Sure, Ivy as Demeter is a gimme, but as reasonable Two-Face as Janus is,  Janus isn’t Greek. And if the Joker is any Greek god, he’s closer to Eris than he is to Hermes. But for two, man, Maxie Zeus is not close to being one of the inner rogues gallery, he’s just another one time loser, never, ever to be seen again.

Batman: The Animated Series Rewatch: His Silicon Soul & Fire from Olympus


Steven Padnick is a freelance writer and editor. By day. You can find more of his writing and funny pictures at padnick.tumblr.com.

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